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  1. Research into deeply embedded language-based prejudice carried out by Dr Robert McKenzie and colleagues has shown that while explicit biases against Northern English accents tend to be held with less intensity by English nationals, their implicit biases are much stronger. More work is needed to raise public awareness of language-based prejudice ...

  2. Dec 6, 2013 · George Bailey, 21, is a third year English Language student from Whitefield. He said: “Because university is so diverse you do hear people saying different words for different things.

  3. In the South you will hear the “Cockney” accent as well as a cleaner accent, which is popularly referred to as “the Queen’s English.”. Northerners poke fun at the way southerners pronounce R’s in front of the A’s in words like bath and laugh. These words come to sound like “barth” and “larff.”. And in reverse southerners ...

  4. Nov 24, 2014 · We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us.

  5. Northern English. Northern English may refer to: People from Northern England. Northern England English, English language in Northern England. Northern American English, English language in Northern United States. A historical term for Northumbria or area governed by the Viking-Age rulers of Bamburgh.

  6. Northern England, or the North of England, is the northern area of England. It partly corresponds to the former borders of Anglian Northumbria, the Anglo-Scandinavian Kingdom of Jorvik and the Brythonic Celtic Hen Ogledd kingdoms . The North is a grouping of three statistical regions: the North East, the North West, and Yorkshire and the Humber.

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